Mental Construct
(Redirected from Cognitive Structure)
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A Mental Construct is a cognitive entity that is created through thought processes (to organize and represent mental content).
- AKA: Cognitive Structure, Thought Formation.
- Context:
- It can enable Cognitive Processing through mental operations and thought patterns.
- It can support Knowledge Organization through conceptual structures and mental frameworks.
- It can facilitate Information Integration through cognitive mapping and mental connections.
- It can maintain Conceptual Coherence through logical relations and semantic links.
- It can guide Mental Navigation through cognitive pathways and thought sequences.
- ...
- It can emerge through Learning Processes via experience integration and knowledge acquisition.
- It can evolve through Cognitive Development via mental growth and understanding expansion.
- It can adapt through Context Interaction via situational application and environmental response.
- It can transform through Conceptual Change via belief revision and knowledge update.
- It can persist through Memory Systems via storage processes and recall mechanisms.
- ...
- It can range from being a Simple Mental Model to being a Complex Cognitive Structure, depending on its structural complexity.
- It can range from being a Personal Construct to being a Shared Mental Model, depending on its social distribution.
- It can range from being a Concrete Mental Image to being an Abstract Thought Structure, depending on its abstraction level.
- It can range from being a Temporary Mental Formation to being a Permanent Cognitive Structure, depending on its temporal persistence.
- It can range from being a Domain Specific Model to being a General Mental Framework, depending on its scope.
- ...
- It can demonstrate Cognitive Property through:
- It can maintain Mental Quality through:
- ...
- Examples:
- Conceptual Models, such as:
- Scientific Models, such as:
- Mathematical Models, such as:
- Knowledge Structures, such as:
- Category Systems, such as:
- Schema Structures, such as:
- Cognitive Maps, such as:
- Spatial Maps, such as:
- Social Maps, such as:
- Problem-Solving Structures, such as:
- Strategic Models, such as:
- Solution Patterns, such as:
- Belief Systems, such as:
- Value Structures, such as:
- Worldview Models, such as:
- ...
- Conceptual Models, such as:
- Counter-Examples:
- Physical Objects like rocks, which lack mental existence.
- Natural Processes like rainfall, which lack cognitive construction.
- External Events like earthquakes, which lack mental creation.
- Material Structures like buildings, which lack cognitive composition.
- Biological Systems like organs, which lack mental formation.
- See: Cognitive Process, Mental Model, Thought Pattern, Knowledge Structure, Conceptual Framework, Mental Operation, Cognitive Architecture, Information Processing, Learning Theory, Memory System.